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News

YoriMawari-nami wave in 2013
Posted inNews

Submarine Canyons Breed Megawaves in Japan

Jenessa Duncombe, Staff Writer by Jenessa Duncombe 21 February 202025 March 2024

The canyons act like a prism, focusing waves into mammoths of destruction.

The track of a boulder that tumbled into one of the Moon’s permanently shadowed regions
Posted inNews

Shedding Light on the Darkest Regions of the Moon

by C. Fogerty 21 February 202021 February 2023

An international team of researchers is analyzing boulder tracks to learn more about some of the most elusive regions on the Moon.

White wine grapes in small glasses
Posted inNews

This Week: Creation Stories, Climate Skeptics, and Wine

by AGU 21 February 202030 September 2021

What Earth and space science stories are we recommending this week?

A fireball in the night sky
Posted inNews

Tiny Fireballs May One Day Reveal Unseen Asteroids

Nola Taylor Redd, Science Writer by Nola Taylor Tillman 20 February 202015 February 2022

The tiny fireball that flew over Japan in 2017 came from an asteroid that could threaten Earth in 10 million years or so. Scientists are trying to use these little meteors to hunt larger objects.

Rock leaves a trail on a cracked, dry lake bed.
Posted inNews

Does This Fossil Reveal a Jurassic Tropical Freeze?

by H. Leifert 19 February 202027 January 2023

On view for over a century, a fossil slab may display evidence of tropical freezing during the Jurassic, but scientists never noticed it—until one finally did. Some colleagues are not convinced.

Carter Clinton and Fatimah Jackson smile while standing at a long table at a research lab.
Posted inNews

Podcast: Exhuming a Buried Piece of American History

by Lauren Lipuma 18 February 20206 October 2025

Scientists are using grave soil to reconstruct the lives of enslaved Africans in colonial New York.

Satellite image of the Strait of Juan de Fuca
Posted inNews

Fluid Pressure Changes Grease Cascadia’s Slow Aseismic Earthquakes

Mary Caperton Morton, Science Writer by Mary Caperton Morton 18 February 202019 August 2022

Twenty-five years’ worth of data allows scientists to suss out subtle signals deep in subduction zones.

Posted inNews

Edward J. Smith (1927–2019)

by B. Tsurutani and M. M. Neugebauer 18 February 202026 January 2022

Pioneer in space plasma research and AGU Fellow (1992)

Water flows between encroaching ice crystals.
Posted inNews

River Ice Is Disappearing

Sarah Derouin, Science Writer by Sarah Derouin 18 February 202023 March 2023

Over the past 3 decades, the persistence of river ice has decreased by almost a week. The decrease in ice has important implications for ecology, climate, and the economy.

Large ice sheet on the right; water on the left
Posted inNews

“Glacial Earthquakes” Spotted for the First Time on Thwaites

Katherine Kornei, Science Writer by Katherine Kornei 17 February 202016 July 2025

These seismic events, triggered by icebergs capsizing and ramming into Thwaites, reveal that the glacier has lost some of its floating ice shelf.

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Frictional Properties of the Nankai Accretionary Prism

11 December 20259 December 2025
Editors' Vox

Hydrothermal Circulation and Its Impact on the Earth System

3 December 20253 December 2025
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